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Chapter 28: Alternating Current Phasors and Alternating Currents Alternating current (AC current) • Current which varies sinusoidally in time is called alternating current (AC) as opposed to direct current (DC). One example of AC current source is a coil of wire rotating with constant angular velocity in a magnetic field. The symbol ~ is used to denote an AC source. In general a source means either a source of alternating current or voltage. V sin wt for alternatin g voltage, V voltage amplitude i I sin wt for alternatin g current, I current amplitude • In the U.S. and Canada, commercial electric-power distribution system uses a frequency of f = 60 Hz, corresponding to w = 377 rad/s. In much of the rest of the world uses f = 50 Hz. In Japan, however, the country is divided in two regions with f = 50 Hz and 60 Hz. Note : V sin wt, i I sin wt V VP sin wt, I I P sin wt in textboo k Phasors and Alternating Currents Phasors Rectifier and rectified current phasor I=IP sin wt • A convenient way to express a quantity varying sinusoidally with time is by a phasor in phasor diagram as shown. IP wt O + + - w Phasors and Alternating Currents Rectifier and rectified current (cont’d) Phasors and Alternating Currents Root-mean-square current and voltage • Root-mean-square current of a sinusoidal current time averaged 1 I P2 2 I I P sin wt I I sin wt I (1 cos 2wt ) I 2 2 2 I rms 2 P 2 2 P IP 2 • Root-mean-square voltage of a sinusoidal voltage Vrms VP 2 For 120-volt AC, V=170 V. Reluctance Resistance, inductance, capacitance and reactance • Resistor in an AC circuit Given: e e m sin wt em VR RI R e m sin wt I R x R s i n wt R Voltage across R in phase with current r1 r1 x 0 , .. r1 0 , .. r1 through R n enm em 1 R VR e ~ 1 IR I IR V R f( x ) 0 0 0 f( x ) 0 em 1 00 2 t x 4 6 IR em 1 0 R 0 wt R 2 t x 4 6 At time t I=em/R Reluctance Resistance, inductance, capacitance and reactance • Inductor in an AC circuit Given: e e m sin wt dI VL L L e m sin wt dt 0, r1 dI L em L L IL sin wtdt e ~ e e I L d I L m co s w t m sin wt / 2 wL wL r1 Voltage across L leads currentx through 0 , .. r1 L by one-quarter cycle (90°). .. r1 n em 1 wL n e m1 IL VL e 0 f( x ) 0 0 f( x ) 0 em 1 0 0 2 tx 4 6 em 1 wL 00 2 tx 4 6 I IL L eV m wt I=em/(wL) At time t 0, Reluctance Resistance, inductance, capacitance and reactance • Capacitor in an AC circuit Given: e e m sin wt C Q VC e m sin wt Q Ce m sin wt C e ~ I C dQ wCe m cos wt wCe m sin( wt ) dt 2 r1 IC Voltage across C lags current through C by one-quarter cycle (90°). r1 x .. r1 0, .. r1 n n wCe m1 e m1 IC VC 0 f( x ) 0 0 f( x ) 0 em wt 1 00 2 4 x 6 t wCe m1 I IC em wt 00 2 t x 4 6 e VC I=wCem At time t Reluctance LRC series circuit and reluctance LRC circuit summary Given: e e m sin wt Assume the solution for current: I (t ) I m sin( wt ) VR RI m sin( wt ) 1 VC I m cos(wt ) wC VL wLI m cos(wt ) (See derivation later) amplitude VR I m R 1 VC I m wC XC VL I mw L XL reactance Reluctance LRC series circuit and reluctance (cont’d) What is reactance? fw/2 You can think of it as a frequency-dependent resistance. 1 XC wC XL wL ( " XR " R ) For high ω, χC~0 - Capacitor looks like a wire (“short”) For low ω, χC∞ - Capacitor looks like a break For low ω, χL~0 - Inductor looks like a wire (“short”) For high ω, χL∞ - Inductor looks like a break (inductors resist change in current) LRC Circuits LRC series circuit (cont’d) • Given: e • Assume: R e m sin wt I I m sin( wt ) amplitude Q Im w C cos(wt ) dI I mw cos(wt ) dt VR RI RI m sin( wt ) VC Q 1 I m cos(wt ) C wC dI VL L wLI m cos(wt ) Note : sin( wt / 2) cos(wt ) The projections of these phasors along the vertical axis are the actual values of the voltages at the given time. e ~ Im wC w Imw L dt This picture corresponds to a snapshot at t=0. L em Im Im R LRC Circuits LRC series circuit (cont’d) Problem: Given Vdrive = εm sin ωt, find VR, VL, VC, IR, IL, IC R C e Strategy: 1. Draw Vdrive phasor at t=0 2. Guess iR phasor iR im sin( wt ) im sin( ) at t 0 3. Since VR = iR R, this is also the direction for the VR phasor. ~ -φ (No L or C → f = 0) 4. Realize that due to Kirchhoff’s current law, iL = iC = iR (i.e., the same current flows through each). L LRC Circuits LRC series circuit (cont’d) 5. The inductor current IL always lags VL draw VL 90˚ further counterclockwise. 6. The capacitor voltage VC always lags IC draw VC 90˚ further clockwise. VL= I XL VC = I XC -φ VR = I R The lengths of the phasors depend on R, L, C, and ω. The relative orientation of the VR, VL, and VC phasors is always the way we have drawn it. is determined such that VR + VL + VC = ε (Kirchhoff’s voltage rule) These are added like vectors. LRC Circuits Phasor diagrams for LRC circuits: Example y Vout ε ~ x y IR IR ( IX C )2 e 2 2 ε VC x I 2 ( R 2 X C2 ) e 2 I e R 2 X C2 amplitude of current LRC Circuits Filters : Example Vout Vout IR e ~ Vout e R2 X C R R 2 Ex.: C = 1 μF, R = 1Ω 1 wC 2 2 1 1 w0 2 w 1 w0 RC High-pass filter 1 "transmission" R 0.8 0.6 High-pass filter 0.4 0.2 0 0.E+00 1.E+06 2.E+06 3.E+06 4.E+06 (Angular) frequency, om ega 5.E+06 6.E+06 Note: this is ω, f w 2 LRC Circuits Filters Vout ~ ~ ω=0 No current Vout ≈ 0 ω=∞ Capacitor ~ wire Vout ≈ ε Vout Vout ω = ∞ No current Vout ≈ 0 Highe pass filter w0 Vout e Lowpass filter ω = 0 Inductor ~ wire Vout ≈ ε ω = 0 No current because of capacitor ~ ω = ∞ No current because of inductor (Conceptual sketch only) w w0 Vout e w0 Band-pass filter w LRC Circuits Phasor diagrams for LRC circuits: Example 2 Im XL em Im XC em X L XC tan R Im R Reluctance for inductor X L wL e I R X L X C Reluctance for capacitor 2 m 1 XC wC amplitude Impedance Z Z R X L X C 2 Im R Im (X L -X C) 2 Im 2 m 2 2 em R 2 2 X L XC em Z LRC Circuits Phasor diagrams for LRC circuits: Tips • This phasor diagram was drawn as a snapshot of time t=0 with the voltages being given as the projections along the y-axis. y f • Sometimes, in working problems, it is easier to draw the diagram at a time when the current is along the x-axis (when I=0). f I ImXL em f ImR ImXC “Full Phasor Diagram” I X m L em f X m C x I R m From this diagram, we can also create a triangle which allows us to calculate the impedance Z: ImZ | f | Im X L X C ImR “Impedance Triangle” Resonance in Alternating Current Circuits Resonance For fixed R, C, L the current Im will be a maximum at the resonant frequency w0 which makes the impedance Z purely resistive. i.e.: em em Im 2 Z R2 X L X C reaches a maximum when: R C X = XC L This condition is obtained when: wo L 1 wo w oC e ~ L resonance frequency 1 1 ; f0 LC 2 LC • Note that this resonant frequency is identical to the natural frequency of the LC circuit by itself! • At this frequency, the current and the driving voltage are in phase! tan X L XC 0 R Resonance in Alternating Current Circuits Resonance (cont’d) XL Im em Z Im Z R Z cos em cos R X L XC tan R Plot the current versus w, the frequency of the voltage source: → XL - XC R x 0.0 , r1 n em 1 R0 .. r1 XC R=Ro f( x ) Im0.5 g( x ) R=2Ro 00 00 1 wx 2w2o Resonance in Alternating Current Circuits Resonance (cont’d) R On Resonance: 0 and Z=R VR IR e VL IX L e XL R eQ I C e R VC IX C e XC R e ~ L eQ On resonance, the voltage across the reactive elements is amplified by Q! Necessary to pick up weak radio signals, cell phone transmissions, etc. Power in Alternating Current Circuits Power • The instantaneous power (for some frequency, w) delivered at time t is given by: P(t ) e (t ) I (t ) e m sin wt I m sin( wt ) • The most useful quantity to consider here is not the instantaneous power but rather the average power delivered in a cycle. P(t ) e m I m sin wt sin( wt ) • To evaluate the average on the right, we first expand the sin(wt-) term. Power in Alternating Current Circuits Power • Expanding, sin wt sin( wt ) sin wt (sin wt cos cos wt sin ) • Taking the averages, sin wt cos wt 0 1 1.01+1 sinwtcoswt (Product of even and odd function = 0) h( x ) 0 0 • Generally: 2 1 1 2 sin 2 x sin xdx 2 0 2 1.01 1 -1 00 2 0 x 0.0 , 4 2 6 6.28 .. r1 n • Putting it all back together again, 1/2 0 2 P(t ) e m I m cos sin wt sin sin wt cos wt r1 wx t 1 +1 sin2wt h( x ) 0 0 P(t ) 1 e m I m cos 2 -11 00 2 wx t 4 2 6 Power in Alternating Current Circuits Power This result is often rewritten in terms of rms values: e rms 1 em 2 I rms 1 Im 2 P(t ) e rms I rms cos Power delivered depends on the phase, f, the “power factor” Phase depends on the values of L, C, R, and w Therefore... P(t ) e rms I rms cos Power in Alternating Current Circuits Power Power, as well as current, peaks at w = w0. The sharpness of the resonance depends on the values of the components. Recall: Im em R cos e 2 rms 2 2 P(t ) cos I rms R R We can write this in the following manner (which we won’t try to prove): e 2 rms x2 P(t ) R x 2 Q 2 ( x 2 1) 2 …introducing the curious factors Q and x... Resonance in Alternating Current Circuits Power and resonance A parameter “Q” is often defined to describe the sharpness of resonance peaks in both mechanical and electrical oscillating systems. “Q” is defined as U Q 2 max DU where Umax is max energy stored in the system and DU is the energy dissipated in one cycle 1 2 LI max 2 For RLC circuit, Umax is U max Losses only come from R: 1 2 1 2 2 DU I max RT I max R 2 2 w res This gives Q w res L period R And for completeness, note x w w res Resonance in Alternating Current Circuits Power and resonance wres For Q > few, Q FWHM e 2 rms Q=3 R0 FWHM Full Width at Half Maximum FWHM <P> 0 Q Quality of the peak Higher Q = sharper peak = better quality R=Ro R=2Ro 0 w 2wo Transformers Transformers • AC voltages can be stepped up or stepped down by the use of transformers. The AC current in the primary circuit creates a time-varying magnetic field in the iron e iron ~ This induces an emf on the secondary windings due to the mutual inductance of the two sets of coils. V1 V2 N 1 (primary) N 2 (secondary) • The iron is used to maximize the mutual inductance. We assume that the entire flux produced by each turn of the primary is trapped in the iron. Transformers Ideal transformer without a load No resistance losses All flux contained in iron Nothing connected on secondary The primary circuit is just an AC voltage source in series with an inductor. The change in flux produced in each turn is given by: dturn V1 dt N1 iron e ~ V1 V2 N1 N2 (primary) (secondary) • The change in flux per turn in the secondary coil is the same as the change in flux per turn in the primary coil (ideal case). The induced voltage appearing across the secondary coil is given by: dturn N 2 V2 N 2 V1 dt N1 • Therefore, • N2 > N1 secondary V2 is larger than primary V1 (step-up) • N1 > N2 secondary V2 is smaller than primary V1 (step-down) • Note: “no load” means no current in secondary. The primary current, termed “the magnetizing current” is small! Transformers Ideal transformer with a load What happens when we connect a resistive load to the secondary coil? Changing flux produced by primary coil induces an emf in secondary which produces current I2 I2 iron e ~ V2 R V1 V2 N1 (primary) R N2 (secondary) This current produces a flux in the secondary coil µ N2I2, which opposes the change in the original flux -- Lenz’s law This induced changing flux appears in the primary circuit as well; the sense of it is to reduce the emf in the primary, to “fight” the voltage source. However, V1 is assumed to be a voltage source. Therefore, there must be an increased current I1 (supplied by the voltage source) in the primary which produces a flux µ N1I1 which exactly cancels the flux produced by I2. I1 N2 I2 N1 Transformers Ideal transformer with a load (cont’d) e iron ~ Power is dissipated only in the load resistor R. V22 2 Pdissipated I 2 R V2 I 2 R Where did this power come from? It could come only from the voltage source in the primary: Pgenerated V1I1 I1 V2 I 2 V1 I1 I 2 = N2 N1 N2 N1 V1 V1 = V1 V2 N1 (primary) N2 (secondary) V1I1 V2 I 2 N2 N1 V2 N 2 V1 N 2 R N1 R N1 2 The primary circuit has to drive the resistance R of the secondary. R Exercises Exercise 1 Suppose em = 100 volts, f=1000 Hz, R=10 Ohms, L=4.22 mH, Find XL, Z, I, VR, and Vl. XL wL 6.28 1000 0.00422H 26.5 Z R 2 (wL) 2 Z 10 2 (26.5) 2 28.3 em 100 I 3.53 A. Z 28.3 VR RI 10 3.53 35.3 V. VL X L I 26.5 3.53 93.5 V. Exercises Exercise 2: Calculate power lost in R in Exercise 1 2 Pavg Irms R I 3.53A Irms 2.50A 2 1.414 Pavg (2.50A)210 62.5Watts To calculate power produced by the generator you need to take account of the phase difference between the voltage and the current. In general you can write: Pavg ermsIrms cos For an inductor P = 0 because the phase difference between current through the inductor and voltage across the inductor is 90 degrees